World’s First Independent Floating Nation Is Set To Launch In Pacific Ocean In 2022

The world’s first independent floating nation which will launch in the Pacific Ocean in 2022 will operate outside of government regulations using its own ‘Vayron’ cryptocurrency.

The plans will see the sea-bound city state, with 300 homes as well as a handful of hotels, restaurants, offices and more, built in the Pacific Ocean off the island of Tahiti.

Bankrolled by PayPal founder Peter Thiel, the £37 million ($50 million) project is a pilot program in partnership with the government of Polynesia and is championed by a movement of academics, philanthropists and investors.

In a new interview, Nathalie Mezza-Garcia, a political scientist and researcher for the Floating Island Project, says the island’s residents will be free of ‘fluctuating geopolitical influences and trade issues’ and claimed the nation could one day house refugees displaced by climate change.

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The world’s first independent floating nation that operates outside of government regulations using its own cryptocurrency is set to launch by 2022. The plans will see the sea-bound city state (artist’s impression), with 300 homes as well as a handful of hotels, restaurants, offices and more, built in the Pacific Ocean off the island of Tahiti

Speaking to CNBC, Ms Mezza-Garcia, a researcher at Warwick University, said: ‘There is significance to this project being trialed in the Polynesian Islands. This is the region where land is resting on coral and will disappear with rising sea levels.

‘Once we can see how this first island works, we will have a proof of concept to plan for islands to house climate refugees.’

The scheme is the creation of the nonprofits Seasteading Institute and Blue Froniters, which alongside Thiel’s investment fund the project through philanthropic donations via tokens of their own cryptocurrency, Vayron.

The radical plans are expected to be completed by 2022 and cost as much as £37 million ($50 million).

The island’s structures will feature ‘green roofs’ covered with vegetation and construction will use local bamboo, coconut fibre, wood and recycled metal and plastic.

It could see the creation of an independent nation that floats in international waters and operates within its own laws to ‘liberate humanity from politicians’, according to the Seasteading Institute.

Bankrolled by PayPal founder Peter Thiel, the £37 million ($50 million) project is a pilot program in partnership with the government of Polynesia and is championed by a movement of academics, philanthropists and investors

WHAT IS THE FLOATING ISLAND PROJECT?

A group of academics, philanthropists and investors plan to build an independent floating nation by 2022.

The £37 million ($50 million) plans will see the sea-bound city state, with 300 homes as well as a handful of hotels, restaurants, offices and more.

Bankrolled by Paypal founder Peter Thiel, the Floating Island Project will operate outside of governments laws and regulations, and is due to be built in the Pacific Ocean off the island of Tahiti.

It’s envisaged that between 250 and 300 people will call the first floating city home.

The world’s first floating nation is set to appear in the Pacific Ocean off the island of Tahiti by 2022 (artist’s impression). A handful of hotels, homes, offices, restaurants and more will be built in the next few years by the nonprofit Seasteading Institute, which hopes to ‘liberate humanity from politicians’

The prototype nation has partnered with French Polynesia, a collection of 118 islands in the southern Pacific, which is interested in the project as the area is at risk from rising sea levels.

The island – the brainchild of nonprofits organisations the Seasteading Institute and Blue Froniters – is being funded by philanthropic donations via tokens of the project’s own cryptocurrency, dubbed Varyon.

In future, the project’s backers envision hundreds of floating islands operating independently of international governments to ‘liberate humanity from politicians’, according to the Seasteading Institute.

She added that the project is an exciting prospect for those disenchanted with the political sphere of today.

The scheme is the creation of the nonprofit Seasteading Institute, which hopes to ‘liberate humanity from politicians’. This image shows how the artificial island will blend in with nature

Nathalie Mezza-Garcia, a political scientist and researcher for the Floating Island Project, says the island’s residents will be free of ‘fluctuating geopolitical influences and trade issues’. The island has been designed to take into account swell, the wind, sunlight and even the position of the stars

‘If you don’t want to live under a particular government, ‘people will be able to just take their house and float away to another island,’ Ms Mezza-Garcia said.

The Seasteading Institute, co-founded by Paypal founder Peter Thiel, has spent the past five years creating designs for ‘permanent, innovative communities floating at sea’, joining up with Blue Frontiers – a new startup that specialises in building floating islands – last year.

Blue Froniters released concept images of the French Polynesia project in December 2017.

The scheme is the creation of the nonprofits Seasteading Institute and Blue Froniters, which fund the project through philanthropic donations via tokens of their own cryptocurrency, dubbed Varyon. This artist’s impression shows how dwellings on the island might look

Hills and mountains, the shape of reefs and other underwater landmarks, as well as the rising and setting of the sun, moon and stars are reflected in the design. This image shows how the floating island will look from the shore of nearby Tahiti

WHO ARE THE ‘SEASTEADERS’?

Seasteaders are a diverse global team of marine biologists, nautical engineers, aquaculture farmers, medical researchers, investors, environmentalists, and artists according to The Seasteading Institute’s website.

‘Our goal is to maximise entrepreneurial freedom to create blue jobs to welcome anyone to the Next New World,’ the group writes on its website.

The Institute was founded in 2008 by PayPal founder, Peter Thiel and activist, software engineer and political economic theorist Patri Friedman, who is the grandson of Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman.

Mr Theil, a venture capitalist who co-founded PayPal, has funnelled $1.25 million ($812,920) into the Institute and has previously called Seasteading an ‘open frontier for experimenting with new ideas for government’.

The world’s first floating city is set to appear in the Pacific Ocean off the island of Tahiti

The designs took inspiration from the rich Polynesian culture, in particular from traditional navigation, which is based on the observation and knowledge of natural elements.

In a written statement, a spokesman for the Seasteading Institute said: ‘During several visits to French Polynesia and after getting acquainted with the environment and the local contexts, one thing was sure, the project has to blend into its environment.

‘To achieve this, local environmental characteristics, climate, ecology and cultural context have all been studied and play a major role in the process.

‘The project, however, doesn’t only want to not hurt the existing environment, the vision of the Blue Frontiers [is to] facilitate the development of more conscious and balanced settlements at sea where humans can peacefully coexist with the environment and with each other.’

The overall shape of the construction reflected the pattern of a fish hook, an ancestral tool that symbolises the actions of the demigod Maui.

The radical plans, bankrolled by PayPal founder Peter Thiel, could see the creation of an independent ‘start-up country’ that will float in international waters and operate within its own laws

Hills and mountains, the shape of reefs and other underwater landmarks, as well as the rising and setting of the sun, moon and stars were reflected in the design.

Small platforms with villas would be aligned to the path of the stars of the Sirius, or Rua faupapa, star system, according to the plans.

Larger platforms with mixed-use buildings aligned to the celestial pillar Pou, starting from the main platform, the ‘star headlight’ or Ta’urua, and ending by the guide star Avei’a, passing through the zenith of the floating island.

Other elements of navigation were taken into account in the urban planning.

French Polynesia, a collection of 118 islands in the southern Pacific, is interested in the project as the area is at risk from rising sea levels

Draft legislation will be drawn up this year and construction is expected to begin in 2019. Floating islands would feature aquaculture farms, healthcare, medical research facilities, and sustainable energy powerhouses

The larger platforms would be oriented according to the prevailing wind direction, in order to create calmer wave conditions behind them.

The project aims to include Polynesian culture in the design and detailing of buildings and other structures.

Local construction techniques and materials would be blended with modern technologies to fulfil contemporary needs while preserving continuity with tradition.

Speaking in November, Joe Quirk, president of the Seasteading Institute, said he wanted to see ‘thousands’ of rogue floating cities by 2050, each of them ‘offering different ways of governance’.

The first city would be built on a network of 11 rectangular and five-sided platforms so the city could be rearranged according to its inhabitants’ needs like a floating jigsaw, Joe Quirk, spokesman for the project explained last year

A feasibility report by Dutch engineering firm Deltasync in January 2017 said the square and pentagon platforms would measure 164ft (50metres) in length and they would have 164 ft-tall (50 metre) sides to protect buildings and residents

‘Governments just don’t get better,’ Mr Quirk told the New York Times.

‘They’re stuck in previous centuries. That’s because land incentives a violent monopoly to control it.’

First revealed in January, the plans have been approved by the French Polynesian government, which is now creating a special economic zone so the floating nation can operate under its own trade laws.

The tiny nation, a collection of 118 islands in the southern Pacific with a population just over 200,000, has granted the Seasteading Institute 100 acres of beachfront to operate from.

French Polynesia is interested in the project as the area is at risk from rising sea levels.

The feasibility report supported the idea that the project is economically feasible, with each platform costing less than $15 million (£10 million) which works out at a similar price as land in London or New York

Source www.dailymail.co.uk

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